The Chinese government still faces daunting challenges in
reforming its administrative system, despite achievements over the
last two decades, a senior government official said Wednesday.
"China launched its administrative system reform in the 1980s
and has achieved a breakthrough in this regard with the advancement
and deepening of the economic system reform," said Zhu Zhixin,
vice-chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission
(NDRC).
Zhu told an international seminar on government administrative
system reform jointly organized by the NDRC and the World Bank that
the system still had major problems that prevented it from meeting
the needs of the changing society.
Problems included redundant organizations and overlapping
functions, inefficiency, slowness in reforming the income
distribution and social security systems, inadequate supply of
public goods and services and widening gaps in regional
development.
Zhu called for the speeding up of the reform, saying it was a
key link in solving social and economic problems.
He said the government must further transform its functions and
separate itself from enterprise. It must focus on its
responsibilities and abstain from what was not its business, and
allow market forces a bigger role in distributing resources.
A proper definition of the government's responsibilities was
necessary, he said. A public finance system must be established to
ensure the fair and efficient delivery of public goods and
services, and the government must be given proper means to enforce
its macro-economic goals.
The government must further improve its decision-making process
by making it more democratic and transparent, Zhu said. This could
be achieved through consultations with experts, public hearings and
allowing market forces and social organizations a bigger role in
matters that did not necessarily involve the government.
The government should further improve its services by making
itself more accessible and more transparent. Innovations such as
the so-called "one-stop" services, where people could approach
different government bodies at one place, should be promoted.
To promote the rule of the law, Zhu said it was necessary to
make more laws that would standardize government conduct.
(Xinhua News Agency May 18, 2006)